Skip to main content

Kantha (Embroidered Quilt)

19th century
Artist/maker unknown, Bengali
Crisscrossed by innumerable rivers and embankments, Bengal centered around the lush and frequently flooded deltaic lowlands where the Ganges-Brahmaputra river system empties into the Bay of Bengal. Wet rice cultivation has long been the primary agricultural activity, and fish a favored food. It is not surprising, then, that aquatic imagery-both prosaic and divine-figures so prominently in the arts of Bengal. At the bottom of this kantha, for example, the four-armed goddess Ganga, personification of the Ganges River, sits atop her makara (a fish-crocodile with elephant trunk). Continuing the riverine theme, the flute-wielding god Krishna is shown at top ferrying the gopis (cowherd women) across the Jamuna River in a boat with a peacock prow and makara stern, a form of pleasure craft peculiar to Bengal.

Object Details

We are always open to learning more about our collections and updating the website. Does this record contain inaccurate information or language that you feel we should improve or change? Contact us here.

Please note that this particular artwork might not be on view when you visit. Don’t worry—we have plenty of exhibitions for you to explore.